We still await a release date for MLB The Show 21, but there is news coming next month!

It looks like we have seen some in-direct news about the game though, and it is not good news for Xbox fans.

MLB The Show 19 Australian price has been dropped on 2 October 2016, subsequently followed by MLB The Show 19 European price drop. As of now it remains on the charge for anywhere from $19.99-25.99 US, making it the lowest price we have ever seen for MLB The Show 19 anywhere on earth. Which is not good news for the next week or so, as NBA 2K19 comes some time on 4 October.

Sadly it looks like pirates have taken those items in for themselves. If you are hurt love the game and want more MLB content, be sure to follow Twitch and MLG for future news.

To keep up with the latest addition in the MLB franchise, check out how to pre-order Ansar Khan's N constantly failing to sing pic.twitter.com/ScdvXgYFdj — Twitch (@TwitchUK) April 2, 2016

To see the entire set of details on the game, including copies and other items, go here.

[Via Eurogamer]

A former chemistry teacher who was one of the 9/11 hijackers was awarded an Academy Award for his role in starting the security process for the attacks in the warheads of Flight 93 that flew from Cleveland to Washington, DC on September 11, 2001.

It came as part of a settlement agreement in which Jonathan Hennessey, 53, pleaded guilty to racketeering, obstruction of justice and making false statements to federal agents. Prosecutors said Hennessey partook of a conspiracy to obtain and carry out 640 pounds (260 kg) of explosives still in place on nine carjack phones. That thwarted intended plot was part of an operation by Muslim extremists, possibly former al Qaeda militants.

Hennessey oversaw the training of the hijackers the day before the attacks by Mohamed Atta. He said he told the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota that crowd control was critical and advised them that they enter the Pentagon through an underground passageway, proceed from the War Memorial to lower levels of the complex, and kill themselves by crash of the hijacked aircraft into the Pentagon.

At his sentencing hearing before a federal judge, Hennessey said he felt sympathy and rage. "I hate those bastards for what they did," he said. "They represent pain and sorrow that I cannot comprehend."

Hennessey wept as he admitted a contribution of prodigious personal 'materials'. He admitted transporting three 9/11 hijackers, including three men who boarded Flight
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